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H.A.A. Al-Kutubi

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By varying the bromine content and cooling method, we are able to induce site disorder in the Li6-xPS5-xBr1+x (x = 0, 0.3, 0.5) system via two routes, allowing us to disentangle the impact of site disorder and chemical composition on conductivity. Through solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), we can explore the chemical environment as well as short-range lithium-ion dynamics and compare these to results obtained from neutron diffraction and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS). We find that the cooling method has a profound effect on the 7Li and 31P environment that cannot be explained through 4d site disorder alone. The configurational entropy (Sconf) is used as a more complete descriptor of structural disorder and linked to distortions in both the phosphorus and lithium environment. These distortions are correlated to increased intercage movement through 7Li T1 spin-lattice relaxation (SLR) NMR. Further analysis of the prefactors obtained from SLR NMR and EIS allows us to obtain the migrational entropy (ΔSm). For short-range SLR movement, the ΔSm correlates well with Sconf, implying that increased intercage movement is related to distortion of the lithium cages as well as a decrease of the intercage distance. Comparison to EIS shows that an increase in short-range movement translates into increased long-range movement in a straightforward manner for slow-cooled samples. However, for quench-cooled samples, this correlation is lost. Lattice softness and phonon-ion interactions are suggested to play an important role in long-range conduction which only becomes apparent when chemical composition and disorder are disentangled. This work shows that by altering one synthesis step, the relationship between site-occupancy-based descriptors (site disorder or Sconf) and lithium dynamics is changed profoundly. Furthermore, it shows that chemical composition and descriptors of site disorder cannot be seen as one and the same, as both play a role that changes with the length scale probed. Finally, it challenges the implicit assumption that increased short-range diffusivity automatically results in increased long-range diffusivity. ...
Lithium argyrodite superionic conductors have recently gained significant attention as potential solid electrolytes for all-solid-state batteries because of their high ionic conductivity and ease of processing. Promising aspects of these materials are the ability to introduce halides (Li6-xPS5-xHal1+x, Hal = Cl and Br) into the crystal structure, which can greatly impact the lithium distribution over the wide range of accessible sites and the structural disorder between the S2- and Hal- anion on the Wyckoff 4d site, both of which strongly influence the ionic conductivity. However, the complex relationship among halide substitution, structural disorder, and lithium distribution is not fully understood, impeding optimal material design. In this study, we investigate the effect of bromide substitution on lithium argyrodite (Li6-xPS5-xBr1+x, in the range 0.0 ≤ x ≤ 0.5) and engineer structural disorder by changing the synthesis protocol. We reveal the correlation between the lithium substructure and ionic transport using neutron diffraction, solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy. We find that a higher ionic conductivity is correlated with a lower average negative charge on the 4d site, located in the center of the Li+ “cage”, as a result of the partial replacement of S2- by Br-. This leads to weaker interactions within the Li+ “cage”, promoting Li-ion diffusivity across the unit cell. We also identify an additional T4 Li+ site, which enables an alternative jump route (T5-T4-T5) with a lower migration energy barrier. The resulting expansion of the Li+ cages and increased connections between cages lead to a maximum ionic conductivity of 8.55 mS/cm for quenched Li5.5PS4.5Br1.5 having the highest degree of structural disorder, an 11-fold improvement compared to slow-cooled Li6PS5Br having the lowest degree of structural disorder. Thereby, this work advances the understanding of the structure-transport correlations in lithium argyrodites, specifically how structural disorder and halide substitution impact the lithium substructure and transport properties and how this can be realized effectively through the synthesis method and tuning of the composition. ...
Journal article (2020) - Silvia Voci, Hanan Al-Kutubi, Liza Rassaei, Klaus Mathwig, Neso Sojic
Nanofluidic electrochemical devices confine the volume of chemical reactions to femtoliters. When employed for light generation by electrochemiluminescence (ECL), nanofluidic confinement yields enhanced intensity and robust luminescence. Here, we investigate different ECL pathways, namely coreactant and annihilation ECL in a single nanochannel and compare light emission profiles. By high-resolution imaging of electrode areas, we show that different reaction schemes produce very different emission profiles in the unique confined geometry of a nanochannel. The confrontation of experimental results with finite element simulation gives further insight into the exact reaction ECL pathways. We find that emission strongly depends on depletion, geometric exclusion, and recycling of reactants in the nanofluidic device. ...
Journal article (2018) - Hanan Al-Kutubi, Silvia Voci, Liza Rassaei, Neso Sojic, Klaus Mathwig
Microfabricated nanofluidic electrochemical devices offer a highly controlled nanochannel geometry; they confine the volume of chemical reactions to the nanoscale and enable greatly amplified electrochemical detection. Here, the generation of stable light emission by electrochemiluminescence (ECL) in transparent nanofluidic devices is demonstrated for the first time by exploiting nanogap amplification. Through continuous oxidation and reduction of [Ru(bpy)3]2+ luminophores at electrodes positioned at opposite walls of a 100 nm nanochannel, we compare classic redox cycling and ECL annihilation. Enhanced ECL light emission of attomole luminophore quantities is evidenced under ambient conditions due to the spatial confinement in a 10 femtoliter volume, resulting in a short diffusion timescale and highly efficient ECL reaction pathways at the nanoscale. ...

Molecules and materials exhibiting redox-switchable fluorescence

Review (2016) - Hanan Al-Kutubi, Hamid Reza Zafarani, Liza Rassaei, Klaus Mathwig
Electrofluorochromic molecules share the unique property that their fluorescence changes as a function of their oxidation state. This makes them interesting from a fundamental perspective as molecular dyads are designed and synthesized to tune the interplay of electrochemical and luminescent properties of molecules. Electrofluorochromic systems also find applications in sensing because a fluorescent signal can be detected with high sensitivity. Moreover, in the recent years the interest in redox-switchable fluorescent polymers has strongly increased due to their applicability in display devices. Here, we review electrofluorochromic molecules and polymers; we emphasize their structures and functional principles and point to specific applications. ...